Patients with traumatic brachial plexus injuries (TBPI) undergo clinical examination and electromyography (EMG) to characterize injury severity and localization. However, precise localization with EMG alone can be difficult when multiple injury sites are possible. Brachial plexus ultrasound (BPUS) allows direct visualization of the brachial plexus, a needed adjunct to EMG to reveal multiple sites of injury in TBPI. We summarize three cases of EMG-confirmed upper trunk TBPI which were clarified using BPUS to additionally involve electrically hidden injuries to the extraforaminal C5 and C6 nerve roots. BPUS demonstrated extensive scarring and focal enlargement of the upper trunk in each patient (all cross-sectional area CSA ≥24 mm 2 ). However, all patients also had C5 and C6 extraforaminal nerve root enlargement (all CSA ≥9 mm 2 and 12 mm 2 , respectively), revealing further neural involvement proximal to the upper trunk into the EMG “gray zone”– postganglionic, extraforaminal cervical nerve root injury which is clinically and electrodiagnostically indistinguishable from the plexus but anatomically and radiographically distinguishable on BPUS. Some EMG-identified upper trunk TBPI may have more proximal involvement of the contributing extraforaminal C5-6 nerve roots, an area electrically indistinguishable from an upper trunk TBPI without the assistance of advanced imaging.
Meiling et al. (Mon,) studied this question.